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Topic: old wood stoves (Read 31791 times)

does anyone still burn the old fisher and all nighter wood stoves i think they are the best they are much better than the new ones it seems i burn an all nighter big moe and i have others i refurbish during the winter months as a hobby but my stove will burn for 12 to 15 hours at a time just wondering if anyone else burns the older stoves still thanks guys

Oh, yeah, we have a Copper Clad in the basement (my bestman's wedding gift to us), s when TSHF we will cooking on that baby. I still cant understand the logic of a pellet stove, unless it can burn corn and your a corn farmer.

Ironwood

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There is no scarcity of opportunity to make a living at what you love to do, there is only scarcity of resolve to make it happen.- Wayne Dyer

Kubota L-4200, Ford 8N, S-10 4WD Beater truck, Chainsaw, Bush Hog, couple ATV's and 141 acres of trees I'm not sure what to do with but I sure do have fun and enjoy being in the woods!The First 50 years of childhood is always the hardest.

I had a little better luck with my Englander. I bought it second hand in 1990. My brother in law bartered for it for some repair work he did on a guy's car. When I got it, it had been sitting outside for six months and was pretty rusty. I cleaned it up, applied some black and relined the fire brick. It has been heating my parents home (a 1910 4-Square) for the last 17-18 years. The best $100 I ever spent.

I had a little better luck with my Englander. I bought it second hand in 1990. My brother in law bartered for it for some repair work he did on a guy's car. When I got it, it had been sitting outside for six months and was pretty rusty. I cleaned it up, applied some black and relined the fire brick. It has been heating my parents home (a 1910 4-Square) for the last 17-18 years. The best $100 I ever spent.

Wudman

Mines got a glass door. They have the intake coming over the top of the glass to suppsedly keep it clean but what happens is the air comes in and goes right up the stack. Not much air gets to the coals. MAkes it hard to get a good hot fire going.Poor design.

Worst part was the lack of customer service from them. Another story....

I already jacked this thread.

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Kubota L-4200, Ford 8N, S-10 4WD Beater truck, Chainsaw, Bush Hog, couple ATV's and 141 acres of trees I'm not sure what to do with but I sure do have fun and enjoy being in the woods!The First 50 years of childhood is always the hardest.

I remember those old fisher stoves. Helped a friend put one in back in the 70's. I think it too was a mama bear.

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Kubota L-4200, Ford 8N, S-10 4WD Beater truck, Chainsaw, Bush Hog, couple ATV's and 141 acres of trees I'm not sure what to do with but I sure do have fun and enjoy being in the woods!The First 50 years of childhood is always the hardest.

We got a Kodiak when we built the house 25 years ago....It has two doors with glass..I managed to break one once...replaced the gaskets several times and the brick when they get broke up too much...It looks as good as the day I put it in and works great will hold fire over night ....Tim

Just brokered a deal for a friend. It's a orele , round stove that was made in oregon. Got it for $150, it was seating outside for awhile, but cleaned up nice. They went for over $1500 when they where new. Had one that I got for a cord of firewood but sold it too cheap. Wish I still had it best burner I ever had, and good looking too.

Had a fisher baby bear, they are nice stoves, but can coke up (the Chimeny) real quick if you don't pay attention to how you are burning. Easy way to clean the chimney though when you do find out you were burning to lean on air,for too long, and the chimney starts screaming, and you are sporting a 10 ft plus flame out the raincap. Sold the baby bear, and had an older Lopi upstairs, moved it to the basement, and now it heats the whole house, (about 1800 sq. ft.). Anyone ever used or seen those fancy soapstone stoves? They look real nice, and they say they heat longer than steel??

Every household around here had an Enterprise kitchen wood burning stove. And that's in days with no such thing as insulation and -30F January. Even in old fish and game camps in my lifetime, there was an Enterprise sitting right there. My furnace is also Enterprise. I can bead the sweat out on ya real quick with that baby.

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Pre-commercial thinning pays off.

'If she wants to play lumberjack, she's going to have to learn to handle her end of the log.'Dirty Harry

Oh, yeah, we have a Copper Clad in the basement (my bestman's wedding gift to us), s when TSHF we will cooking on that baby. I still cant understand the logic of a pellet stove, unless it can burn corn and your a corn farmer.

Ironwood

Why have a pellet stove?1.Fill it once a day2.Clean fuel3. About the same cost for fuel if you have to buy the wood4.Clean it every 2 to 3 days5. Very little ash6. 5 heat adjustmentsI could go on. I would never consider going back to a wood stove.

So what are you going to do when the power goes out, run a generater to run your pellet stove?? I guess the power dosen't go out where you live. I'd say most people who have an old wood stove have them so they don't have to rely on a power company or pellet manufacter for they're heat. At least I do.